Wavelength beam combining laser systems utilizing etalons

ABSTRACT

In various embodiments, wavelength beam combining laser systems incorporate etalons to establish external lasing cavities and/or to combine multiple input beams into a single output beam.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/946,868, filed Nov. 20, 2015, which claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/083,229, filed Nov. 22, 2014, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/083,230, filed Nov. 23, 2014, the entire disclosure of each of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

In various embodiments, the present invention relates to laser systems, specifically wavelength beam combining laser systems incorporating etalons.

BACKGROUND

High-power laser systems are utilized for a host of different applications, such as welding, cutting, drilling, and materials processing. Such laser systems typically include a laser emitter, the laser light from which is coupled into an optical fiber (or simply a “fiber”), and an optical system that focuses the laser light from the fiber onto the workpiece to be processed. The optical system is typically engineered to produce the highest-quality laser beam, or, equivalently, the beam with the lowest beam parameter product (BPP). The BPP is the product of the laser beam's divergence angle (half-angle) and the radius of the beam at its narrowest point (i.e., the beam waist, the minimum spot size). The BPP quantifies the quality of the laser beam and how well it can be focused to a small spot, and is typically expressed in units of millimeter-milliradians (mm-mrad). A

Gaussian beam has the lowest possible BPP, given by the wavelength of the laser light divided by pi. The ratio of the BPP of an actual beam to that of an ideal Gaussian beam at the same wavelength is denoted M², or the “beam quality factor,” which is a wavelength-independent measure of beam quality, with the “best” quality corresponding to the “lowest” beam quality factor of 1.

Wavelength beam combining (WBC) is a technique for scaling the output power and brightness from laser diode bars, stacks of diode bars, or other lasers arranged in a one- or two-dimensional array. WBC methods have been developed to combine beams along one or both dimensions of an array of emitters. Typical WBC systems include a plurality of emitters, such as one or more diode bars, that are combined using a dispersive element to form a multi-wavelength beam. Each emitter in the WBC system individually resonates, and is stabilized through wavelength-specific feedback from a common partially reflecting output coupler that is filtered by the dispersive element along a beam-combining dimension. Exemplary WBC systems are detailed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,192,062, filed on Feb. 4, 2000, U.S. Pat. No. 6,208,679, filed on Sep. 8, 1998, U.S. Pat. No. 8,670,180, filed on Aug. 25, 2011, and U.S. Pat. No. 8,559,107, filed on Mar. 7, 2011, the entire disclosure of each of which is incorporated by reference herein.

A variety of WBC techniques have been utilized to form high-power lasers for many different applications. However, such schemes are often quite complex and utilize a host of different optical components. Thus, there is a need for improved, simpler optical arrangements for WBC laser systems.

SUMMARY

In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, wavelength beam combining (WBC) laser systems feature multiple emitters (or “beam emitters”), e.g., diode bars or the individual diode emitters of a diode bar, which are combined to form a multi-wavelength beam. Embodiments of the present invention also advantageously utilize etalons therewithin for beam combining and/or beam wavelength stabilization. For example, in various embodiments, each emitter in the system individually resonates and is stabilized through wavelength-specific feedback (i.e., partial reflection) from a common etalon, e.g., a plano-convex etalon, which is tilted at a non-zero (but less than) 90°) angle with respect to the beam propagation direction. The convexly curved surface of the etalon thus presents a unique angle of incidence for each beam, which stabilizes each beam at a unique wavelength via optical feedback. The stabilized beams may subsequently be combined utilizing a wavelength combiner that may feature a dispersive element (e.g., a diffraction grating, a dispersive prism, a grism (prism/grating), a transmission grating, or an Echelle grating) along a beam-combining dimension. In this manner, laser systems in accordance with embodiments of the present invention produce multi-wavelength output beams having high brightness and high power.

In other embodiments of the present invention, a planar etalon having opposing parallel surfaces is itself utilized to combine the beams from the array of beam emitters into a multi-wavelength beam, the individual beams being stabilized via feedback from a partially reflective output coupler downstream of the etalon. The etalon, which again has an optical axis tilted at a non-zero (but less than 90°) angle with respect to the propagation direction of the beams, has a front surface that is only partially reflective to the received beams and a back surface, optically downstream of the front surface. Most of the back surface is substantially 100% reflective to the oncoming beams, and thus the beams are received within the etalon and reflect one or more times from the front and back surfaces. The reflecting beams eventually reflect to an exit portion of the back surface, which is substantially non-reflective to the beams (i.e., it may have an anti-reflection coating thereon). In various embodiments, one of the beams may be emitted directly from one of the beam emitters through the front surface of the etalon (perhaps with a partial reflection therefrom) and directly through the exit portion without reflection from the back surface. In this manner, a multi-wavelength combined beam propagates from the exit portion of the back surface of the etalon. The beam subsequently may propagate (and be optionally focused and/or collimated) to a partially reflective output coupler that thus forms part of the external WBC laser cavity (along with, e.g., the back surface of each beam emitter).

Embodiments of the present invention couple multi-wavelength output beams into an optical fiber. In various embodiments, the optical fiber has multiple cladding layers surrounding a single core, multiple discrete core regions (or “cores”) within a single cladding layer, or multiple cores surrounded by multiple cladding layers. In various embodiments, the output beams may be delivered to a workpiece for applications such as cutting, welding, etc.

Herein, “optical elements” may refer to any of lenses, mirrors, prisms, gratings, and the like, which redirect, reflect, bend, or in any other manner optically manipulate electromagnetic radiation. Herein, beam emitters, emitters, or laser emitters, or lasers include any electromagnetic beam-generating device such as semiconductor elements, which generate an electromagnetic beam, but may or may not be self-resonating. These also include fiber lasers, disk lasers, non-solid state lasers, vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELs), etc. Generally, each emitter includes a back reflective surface, at least one optical gain medium, and a front reflective surface. The optical gain medium increases the gain of electromagnetic radiation that is not limited to any particular portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, but that may be visible, infrared, and/or ultraviolet light. An emitter may include or consist essentially of multiple beam emitters such as a diode bar configured to emit multiple beams. The input beams received in the embodiments herein may be single-wavelength or multi-wavelength beams combined using various techniques known in the art.

Laser diode arrays, bars and/or stacks, such as those described in the following general description may be used in association with embodiments of the innovations described herein. Laser diodes may be packaged individually or in groups, generally in one-dimensional rows/arrays (diode bars) or two dimensional arrays (diode-bar stacks). A diode array stack is generally a vertical stack of diode bars. Laser diode bars or arrays generally achieve substantially higher power, and cost effectiveness than an equivalent single broad area diode. High-power diode bars generally contain an array of broad-area emitters, generating tens of watts with relatively poor beam quality; despite the higher power, the brightness is often lower than that of a broad area laser diode. High-power diode bars may be stacked to produce high-power stacked diode bars for generation of extremely high powers of hundreds or thousands of watts. Laser diode arrays may be configured to emit a beam into free space or into a fiber. Fiber-coupled diode-laser arrays may be conveniently used as a pumping source for fiber lasers and fiber amplifiers.

A diode-laser bar is a type of semiconductor laser containing a one-dimensional array of broad-area emitters or alternatively containing sub arrays containing, e.g., 10-20 narrow stripe emitters. A broad-area diode bar typically contains, for example, 19-49 emitters, each having dimensions on the order of, e.g., 1 μm×100 μm. The beam quality along the 1 μm dimension or fast-axis is typically diffraction-limited. The beam quality along the 100 μm dimension or slow-axis or array dimension is typically many times diffraction-limited. Typically, a diode bar for commercial applications has a laser resonator length of the order of 1 to 4 mm, is about 10 mm wide and generates tens of watts of output power. Most diode bars operate in the wavelength region from 780 to 1070 nm, with the wavelengths of 808 nm (for pumping neodymium lasers) and 940 nm (for pumping Yb:YAG) being most prominent. The wavelength range of 915-976 nm is used for pumping erbium-doped or ytterbium-doped high-power fiber lasers and amplifiers.

A diode stack is simply an arrangement of multiple diode bars that can deliver very high output power. Also called diode laser stack, multi-bar module, or two-dimensional laser array, the most common diode stack arrangement is that of a vertical stack which is effectively a two-dimensional array of edge emitters. Such a stack may be fabricated by attaching diode bars to thin heat sinks and stacking these assemblies so as to obtain a periodic array of diode bars and heat sinks There are also horizontal diode stacks, and two-dimensional stacks. For the high beam quality, the diode bars generally should be as close to each other as possible. On the other hand, efficient cooling requires some minimum thickness of the heat sinks mounted between the bars. This tradeoff of diode bar spacing results in beam quality of a diode stack in the vertical direction (and subsequently its brightness) is much lower than that of a single diode bar. There are, however, several techniques for significantly mitigating this problem, e.g., by spatial interleaving of the outputs of different diode stacks, by polarization coupling, or by wavelength multiplexing. Various types of high-power beam shapers and related devices have been developed for such purposes. Diode stacks may provide extremely high output powers (e.g. hundreds or thousands of watts).

In an aspect, embodiments of the invention feature a laser system that includes or consists essentially of an array of beam emitters each emitting a beam, an etalon for receiving the beams and combining the beams into a multi-wavelength beam, focusing optics for focusing the beams toward the etalon, and a partially reflective output coupler for receiving the multi-wavelength beam, reflecting a first portion thereof back toward the etalon, and transmitting a second portion thereof as an output beam composed of multiple wavelengths. The beams are emitted substantially parallel to each other in a propagation direction. The etalon has an optical axis tilted at a non-zero angle (i.e., greater than 0° and less than 90°) with respect to the propagation direction. The etalon includes, consists essentially of, or consists of a partially reflective front surface for receiving the beams and a back surface. The back surface has a reflective portion for reflecting the beams back toward the front surface, and (ii) an exit portion from which the multi-wavelength beam exits the etalon. One or more of the beams (e.g., all but one of the beams) is reflected by both the front surface and the reflective portion of the back surface prior to combination into the multi-wavelength beam.

Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following in any of a variety of combinations. A reflectivity of the front surface of the etalon to the beams may be greater than approximately 75%. A reflectivity of the front surface of the etalon to the beams may be less than 100%. The reflective portion of the back surface of the etalon may have a reflectivity to the beams of approximately 100%. Collimation optics may be disposed optically downstream of the etalon and optically upstream of the partially reflective output coupler. The exit portion of the back surface of the etalon may include an anti-reflective coating thereon. The etalon may be positioned to receive the beam from one of the beam emitters and propagate at least a portion thereof directly through the exit portion of the back surface without reflection from the reflective portion. The front surface of the etalon may be substantially parallel to the back surface of the etalon. The etalon may include, consist essentially of, or consist of glass, sapphire, or fused silica. The output coupler may include, consist essentially of, or consist of a mirror, a volume Bragg grating, and/or a fiber Bragg grating. The focusing optics may include or consist essentially of one or more cylindrical lenses, one or more spherical lenses, one or more spherical mirrors, and/or one or more cylindrical mirrors.

In another aspect, embodiments of the invention feature a laser system that includes or consists essentially of an array of beam emitters each emitting a beam, a plano-convex etalon for (i) receiving the beams, (ii) reflecting a first portion of each beam back to the array of beam emitters, thereby stabilizing each beam at a unique wavelength, and (iii) transmitting a second portion of each beam, focusing optics for focusing the beams toward the plano-convex etalon, and a dispersive element for receiving and dispersing the beams, thereby forming a multi-wavelength output beam. The beams are emitted substantially parallel to each other in a propagation direction. The plano-convex etalon has (i) an optical axis tilted at a non-zero angle (i.e., greater than 0° and less than 90°) with respect to the propagation direction, (ii) a substantially planar front surface, and (iii) a convexly curved back surface optically downstream of the front surface. The focusing optics are disposed optically downstream of the beam emitters and optically upstream of the plano-convex etalon. The dispersive element is disposed optically downstream of the plano-convex etalon.

Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following in any of a variety of combinations. Collimation optics may be disposed optically downstream of the plano-convex etalon and optically upstream of the dispersive element. The dispersive element may include or consist essentially of a diffraction grating (e.g., a transmissive diffraction grating or a reflective diffraction grating). The focusing optics may include or consist essentially of one or more cylindrical lenses, one or more spherical lenses, one or more spherical mirrors, and/or one or more cylindrical mirrors. The plano-convex etalon may include, consist essentially of, or consist of glass, sapphire, or fused silica. Second focusing optics for focusing the beams onto the dispersive element may be disposed optically downstream of the plano-convex etalon and optically upstream of the dispersive element. The second focusing optics may include or consist essentially of one or more cylindrical lenses, one or more spherical lenses, one or more spherical mirrors, and/or one or more cylindrical mirrors.

These and other objects, along with advantages and features of the present invention herein disclosed, will become more apparent through reference to the following description, the accompanying drawings, and the claims. Furthermore, it is to be understood that the features of the various embodiments described herein are not mutually exclusive and may exist in various combinations and permutations. As used herein, the terms “substantially” and “approximately” mean ±10%, and in some embodiments, ±5%. The term “consists essentially of” means excluding other materials that contribute to function, unless otherwise defined herein. Nonetheless, such other materials may be present, collectively or individually, in trace amounts. Herein, the terms “radiation” and “light” are utilized interchangeably unless otherwise indicated. Herein, “downstream” or “optically downstream,” is utilized to indicate the relative placement of a second element that a light beam strikes after encountering a first element, the first element being “upstream,” or “optically upstream” of the second element. Herein, “optical distance” between two components is the distance between two components that is actually traveled by light beams; the optical distance may be, but is not necessarily, equal to the physical distance between two components due to, e.g., reflections from mirrors or other changes in propagation direction experienced by the light traveling from one of the components to the other.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. Also, the drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. In the following description, various embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the following drawings, in which:

FIG. 1A is a schematic of a wavelength beam combining (WBC) method along the array dimension of a single row of emitters in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 1B is a schematic of a WBC method along the array dimension of a two-dimensional array of emitters in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 1C is a schematic of a WBC method along the stack dimension of a two-dimensional array of emitters in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 2 is a schematic showing the effects of smile in a WBC method along the stack dimension of a two-dimensional array of diode laser emitters in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 3A is a schematic of a WBC system including an optical rotator selectively rotating a one-dimensional array of beams in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 3B is a schematic of a WBC system including an optical rotator selectively rotating a two-dimensional array of beams in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 3C is a schematic of a WBC system including an optical rotator selectively reorienting a two-dimensional array of beams in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 3D illustrates output profile views of the system of FIG. 3C with and without an optical rotator in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIGS. 4A-4C illustrate examples of optical rotators in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIGS. 5A-5C illustrate related methods for placing combining elements to generate one-dimensional or two-dimensional laser elements;

FIG. 6 illustrates a WBC embodiment having a spatial repositioning element in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of a two-dimensional array of emitters being reconfigured before a WBC step and individual beam rotation after the WBC step in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 8 illustrates the difference between slow and fast WBC in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 9A illustrates embodiments using an optical rotator before WBC in both a single and stacked array configurations in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 9B illustrates additional embodiments using an optical rotator before WBC in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 10 is illustrative of a single semiconductor chip emitter in accordance with embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 11 is a schematic of a WBC laser system in accordance with embodiments of the invention; and

FIG. 12 is a schematic of a WBC laser system in accordance with embodiments of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Aspects and embodiments relate generally to the field of scaling laser sources to high-power and high-brightness using an external cavity and, more particularly, to methods and apparatus for external-cavity beam combining using both one-dimensional or two-dimensional laser sources. In one embodiment the external cavity system includes one-dimensional or two-dimensional laser elements, an optical system, a dispersive element, and a partially reflecting element. An optical system is one or more optical elements that perform two basic functions. The first function is to overlap all the laser elements along the beam combining dimension onto a dispersive element. The second function is to ensure all the elements along the non-beam combining dimension are propagating normal to the output coupler. In various embodiments, the optical system introduces as little loss as possible. As such, these two functions will enable a single resonance cavity for all the laser elements.

In another embodiment the WBC external cavity system includes wavelength stabilized one-dimensional or two-dimensional laser elements, an optical system, and a dispersive element. One-dimensional or two-dimensional wavelength stabilized laser elements, with unique wavelength, can be accomplished using various means such as laser elements with feedback from wavelength chirped Volume Bragg grating, distributed feedback (DFB) laser elements, or distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) laser elements. Here the main function of the optical system is to overlap all the beams onto a dispersive element. When there is no output coupler mirror external to the wavelength-stabilized laser element, having parallel beams along the non-beam-combining dimension is less important. Aspects and embodiments further relate to high-power and/or high-brightness multi-wavelength external-cavity lasers that generate an overlapping or coaxial beam from very low output power to hundreds and even to megawatts of output power.

In particular, aspects and embodiments are directed to a method and apparatus for manipulating the beams emitted by the laser elements of these external-cavity systems and combining them using a WBC method to produce a desired output profile. Wavelength beam combining methods have been developed to combine asymmetrical beam elements across their respective slow or fast axis dimension. One advantage of embodiments of the present invention is the ability to selectively-reconfigure input beams either spatially or by orientation to be used in slow and fast axis WBC methods, as well as a hybrid of the two. Another advantage is the ability to selectively-reconfigure input beams when there is a fixed-position relationship to other input beams.

FIG. 1A illustrates a basic WBC architecture. In this particular illustration, WBC is performed along the array dimension or slow dimension for broad-area emitters. Individual beams 104 are illustrated in the figures by a dash or single line, where the length or longer dimension of the beam represents the array dimension or slow diverging dimension for broad-area emitters and the height or shorter dimension represents the fast diverging dimension. (See also the left side of FIG. 8). In this related art, a diode bar 102 having four emitters is illustrated. The emitters are aligned in a manner such that the slow dimension ends of each emitted beam 104 are aligned to one another side by side along a single row—sometimes referred to as an array. However, it is contemplated that any lasing elements may be used and in particular laser elements with broad gain bandwidth. Typically a collimation lens 106 is used to collimate each beam along the fast diverging dimension. In some cases the collimation optics can be composed of separate fast axis collimation lenses and slow axis collimation lenses. Typically, transform optic 108 is used to combine each beam along the WBC dimension (or “WBC direction”) 110 as shown by the input front view 112. Transform optic 108 may be a cylindrical or spherical lens or mirror. The transform optic 108 then overlaps the combined beam onto a dispersive element 114 (here shown as a reflecting diffraction grating). The first-order diffracted beams are incident onto a partially reflecting mirror. The laser resonator is formed between the back facet of the laser elements and the partially reflecting mirror. As such, the combined beam is then transmitted as a single output profile onto an output coupler 116. This output coupler then transmits the combined beams 120, as shown by the output front view 118. It is contemplated creating a system devoid of an output coupler. For instance, a one-dimensional or two-dimensional system with wavelength stabilized laser elements and each having a unique wavelength may be accomplished in a few ways. One system or method uses laser elements with feedback from an external wavelength chirped Volume Bragg grating along the beam combining dimension. Another uses internal distributed feedback (DFB) laser elements or internal distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) laser elements. In these systems, the single output profile transmitted from the dispersive element would have the same profile as 118. The output coupler 116 may be a partially reflective mirror or surface or optical coating and act as a common front facet for all the laser elements in diode array 102. A portion of the emitted beams is reflected back into the optical gain and/or lasing portion of diode array 102 in this external cavity system 100 a. An external cavity is a lasing system where the secondary mirror is displaced at a distance away from the emission aperture or facet (not labeled) of each laser emitter. Generally, in an external cavity additional optical elements are placed between the emission aperture or facet and the output coupler or partially reflective surface.

Similarly, FIG. 1B illustrates a stack of laser diode bars each having four emitters where those bars are stacked three high. Like FIG. 1A, the input front view 112 of FIG. 1B, which in this embodiment is a two-dimensional array of emitters, is combined to produce the output front view 118 or a single column of emitters 120. The emitted beams in external cavity 100 b were combined along the array dimension. Here transform optic 108 is a cylindrical lens used to combine the beams along the array. However, a combination of optical elements or optical system may be used such that the optical elements arrange for all the beams to overlap onto the dispersive element and ensure all the beams along the non-beam-combining dimension are propagating normal to the output coupler. A simple example of such an optical system would be a single cylindrical lens with the appropriate focal length along the beam-combining dimension and two cylindrical lenses that form an a focal telescope along the non-beam-combining dimension wherein the optical system projects images onto the partially reflecting mirrors. Many variations of this optical system can be designed to accomplish the same functions.

The array dimension FIG. 1B is also the same axis as the slow dimension of each emitted beam in the case of multimode diode laser emitters. Thus, this WBC system may also be called slow axis combining, where the combining dimension is the same dimension of the beams.

By contrast, FIG. 1C illustrates a stack 150 of laser diode arrays 102 forming a two-dimensional array of emitters, as shown by 120, where instead of combining along the array dimension as in FIGS. 1A and 1B, the WBC dimension now follows along the stack dimension of the emitters. Here, the stacking dimension is also aligned with the fast axis dimension of each of the emitted beams. The input front view 112 is now combined to produce the output front view 118 wherein a single column 120 of emitters is shown.

There are various drawbacks to all three configurations. One of the main drawbacks of configurations shown in FIGS. 1A and 1B is that beam combining is performed along the array dimension. As such external-cavity operation is highly dependent on imperfections of the diode array. If broad-area semiconductor laser emitters are used the spectral utilization in the WBC system is not as efficient as if beam combining is performed along the fast axis dimension. One of the main drawbacks of configurations shown in FIG. 1C is that external beam shaping for beam symmetrization is required for efficient coupling into a fiber. The beam symmetrization optics needed for a high power system having a large number of emitters may be complex and non-trivial. Another disadvantage of configuration 1C is that the output beam quality is limited to that of a single laser bar. Typical semiconductor or diode laser bars have 19 to 49 emitters per bar with nearly diffraction-limited beam quality in one dimension and beam quality that is several hundreds of times diffraction-limited along the array dimension. After beam symmetrization the output beam 120 can be coupled into at best a 100 μ/0.22 Numerical Aperture (NA) fiber. To obtain higher beam quality a small number of emitter bars is needed. For example to couple into 50 μm/0.22 NA fiber a five-emitter output beam is needed. In many industrial laser applications a higher brightness laser beam is required. For example, in some applications a two-emitter output beam is needed instead of 19 or 49. The two-emitter output beam can be coupled to a smaller core diameter fiber with much more engineering tolerance and margin. This additional margin in core diameter and NA is critical for reliable operation at high power (kW-class) power levels. While it is possible to procure five-emitter or two-emitter bars the cost and complexity is generally much higher as compared to standard 19 or 49 emitter bars because of the significantly reduced power per bar. In this disclosure, we disclose methods to remove all of the above shortcomings.

The previous illustrations, FIGS. 1A-1C, showed pre-arranged or fixed position arrays and stacks of laser emitters. Generally, arrays or stacks are arranged mechanically or optically to produce a particular one-dimensional or two-dimensional profile. Thus, fixed-position is used to describe a preset condition of laser elements where the laser elements are mechanically fixed with respect to each other as in the case of semiconductor or diode laser bars having multiple emitters or fiber lasers mechanically spaced apart in V-grooves, as well as other laser emitters that come packaged with the emitters in a fixed position.

Alternatively, fixed position may refer to the secured placement of a laser emitter in a WBC system where the laser emitter is immobile. Pre-arranged refers to an optical array or profile that is used as the input profile of a WBC system. Often times the pre-arranged position is a result of emitters configured in a mechanically fixed position. Pre-arranged and fixed position may also be used interchangeably. Examples of fixed-position or pre-arranged optical systems are shown in FIGS. 5A-C.

FIGS. 5A-5C refer to prior art illustrated examples of optically arranged one and two-dimensional arrays. FIG. 5A illustrates an optically arranged stack of individual optical elements 510. Mirrors 520 are used to arrange the optical beams from optical elements 530, each optical element 530 having a near field image 540, to produce an image 550 (which includes optical beams from each optical element 530) corresponding to a stack 560 (in the horizontal dimension) of the individual optical elements 510. Although the optical elements 510 may not be arranged in a stack, the mirrors 520 arrange the optical beams such that the image 550 appears to correspond to the stack 560 of optical elements 510. Similarly, in FIG. 5B, the mirrors 520 can be used to arrange optical beams from diode bars or arrays 570 to create an image 550 corresponding to a stack 560 of diode bars or arrays 575. In this example, each diode bar or array 570 has a near field image 540 that includes optical beams 545 from each individual element in the bar or array. Similarly, the mirrors 520 may also be used to optically arrange laser stacks 580 into an apparent larger overall stack 560 of individual stacks 585 corresponding to image 550, as shown in FIG. 5C.

Nomenclature, used in prior art to define the term “array dimension,” referred to one or more laser elements placed side by side where the array dimension is also along the slow axis. One reason for this nomenclature is diode bars with multiple emitters are often arranged in this manner where each emitter is aligned side by side such that each beam's slow dimension is along a row or array. For purposes of this application, an array or row refers to individual emitters or beams arranged across a single dimension. The individual slow or fast dimension of the emitters of the array may also be aligned along the array dimension, but this alignment is not to be assumed. This is important because some embodiments described herein individually rotate the slow dimension of each beam aligned along an array or row. Additionally, the slow axis of a beam refers to the wider dimension of the beam and is typically also the slowest diverging dimension, while the fast axis refers to the narrower dimension of the beam and is typically the fastest diverging dimension. The slow axis may also refer to single mode beams.

Additionally, some prior art defines the term “stack or stacking dimension” referred to as two or more arrays stacked together, where the beams' fast dimension is the same as the stacking dimension. These stacks were pre-arranged mechanically or optically. However, for purposes of this application a stack refers to a column of beams or laser elements and may or may not be along the fast dimension. Particularly, as discussed above, individual beams or elements may be rotated within a stack or column.

In some embodiments it is useful to note that the array dimension and the slow dimension of each emitted beam are initially oriented across the same axis; however, those dimensions, as described in this application, may become oriented at an offset angle with respect to each other. In other embodiments, the array dimension and only a portion of the emitters are arranged along the array or perfectly aligned along the same axis at a certain position in a WBC system. For example, the array dimension of a diode bar may have emitters arranged along the array dimension, but because of smile (often a deformation or bowing of the bar) individual emitters' slow emitting dimension is slightly skewed or offset from the array dimension.

Laser sources based on common “commercial, off-the-shelf” or COTS high power laser diode arrays and stacks are based on broad-area semiconductor or diode laser elements. Typically, the beam quality of these elements is diffraction-limited along the fast axis and many times diffraction-limited along the slow axis of the laser elements. It is to be appreciated that although the following discussion may refer primarily to single emitter laser diodes, diode laser bars and diode laser stacks, embodiments of the invention are not limited to semiconductor or laser diodes and may be used with many different types of laser and amplifier emitters, including fiber lasers and amplifiers, individually packaged diode lasers, other types of semiconductor lasers including quantum cascade lasers (QCLs), tapered lasers, ridge waveguide (RWG) lasers, distributed feedback (DFB) lasers, distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) lasers, grating coupled surface emitting laser, vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL), and other types of lasers and amplifiers.

All of the embodiments described herein can be applied to WBC of diode laser single emitters, bars, and stacks, and arrays of such emitters. In those embodiments employing stacking of diode laser elements, mechanical stacking or optical stacking approaches can be employed. In addition, where an HR coating is indicated at the facet of a diode laser element, the HR coating can be replaced by an AR coating, provided that external cavity optical components, including but not limited to a collimating optic and bulk HR mirror are used in combination with the AR coating. This approach is used, for example, with WBC of diode amplifier elements. Slow axis is also defined as the worse beam quality direction of the laser emission. The slow axis typically corresponds to the direction parallel to the semiconductor chip at the plane of the emission aperture of the diode laser element. Fast axis is defined as the better beam quality direction of the laser emission. Fast axis typically corresponds to the direction perpendicular to the semiconductor chip at the plane of the emission aperture of the diode laser element.

An example of a single semiconductor chip emitter 1000 is shown in FIG. 10. The aperture 1050 is also indicative of the initial beam profile. Here, the height 1010 at 1050 is measured along the stack dimension. Width 1020 at 1050 is measured along the array dimension. Height 1010 is the shorter dimension at 1050 than width 1020. However, height 1010 expands faster or diverges to beam profile 1052, which is placed at a distance away from the initial aperture 1050. Thus, the fast axis is along the stack dimension. Width 1020 which expands or diverges at a slower rate as indicated by width 1040 being a smaller dimension than height 1030. Thus, the slow axis of the beam profile is along the array dimension. Though not shown, multiple single emitters such as 1000 may be arranged in a bar side by side along the array dimension.

Drawbacks for combining beams primarily along their slow axis dimension may include: reduced power and brightness due to lasing inefficiencies caused by pointing errors, smile and other misalignments. As illustrated in FIG. 2, a laser diode array with smile, one often caused by the diode array being bowed in the middle sometimes caused by the diode laser bar mounting process, is one where the individual emitters along the array form a typical curvature representative of that of a smile. Pointing errors are individual emitters along the diode bar emitting beams at an angle other than normal from the emission point. Pointing error may be related to smile, for example, the effect of variable pointing along the bar direction of a diode laser bar with smile when the bar is lensed by a horizontal fast axis collimating lens. These errors cause feedback from the external cavity, which consists of the transform lens, grating, and output coupler, not to couple back to the diode laser elements. Some negative effects of this miscoupling are that the WBC laser breaks wavelength lock and the diode laser or related packaging may be damaged from miscoupled or misaligned feedback not re-entering the optical gain medium. For instance the feedback may hit some epoxy or solder in contact or in close proximity to a diode bar and cause the diode bar to fail catastrophically.

Row 1 of FIG. 2 shows a single laser diode bar 202 without any errors. The embodiments illustrated are exemplary of a diode bar mounted on a heat sink and collimated by a fast-axis collimation optic 206. Column A shows a perspective or 3-D view of the trajectory of the output beams 211 going through the collimation optic 206. Column D shows a side view of the trajectory of the emitted beams 211 passing through the collimation optic 206. Column B shows the front view of the laser facet with each individual laser element 213 with respect to the collimation optic 206. As illustrated in row 1, the laser elements 213 are perfectly straight. Additionally, the collimation optic 206 is centered with respect to all the laser elements 213. Column C shows the expected output beam from a system with this kind of input. Row 2 illustrates a diode laser array with pointing error. Shown by column B of row 2 the laser elements and collimation optic are slightly offset from each other. The result, as illustrated, is the emitted beams having an undesired trajectory that may result in reduced lasing efficiency for an external cavity. Additionally, the output profile may be offset to render the system ineffective or cause additional modifications. Row 3 shows an array with packaging error. The laser elements no longer sit on a straight line, and there is curvature of the bar. This is sometimes referred to as “smile.” As shown on row 3, smile may introduce even more trajectory problems as there is no uniform path or direction common to the system. Column D of row 3 further illustrates beams 211 exiting at various angles. Row 4 illustrates a collimation lens unaligned with the laser elements in a twisted or angled manner. The result is probably the worst of all as the output beams generally have the most collimation or twisting errors. In most systems, the actual error in diode arrays and stacks is a combination of the errors in rows 2, 3, and 4. In both methods 2 and 3, using VBGs and diffraction gratings, laser elements with imperfections result in output beams no longer pointing parallel to the optical axis. These off optical axis beams result in each of the laser elements lasing at different wavelengths. The plurality of different wavelengths increases the output spectrum of the system to become broad as mentioned above.

One of the advantages of performing WBC along the stacking dimension (here also primarily the fast dimension) of a stack of diode laser bars is that it compensates for smile as shown in FIG. 2. Pointing and other alignment errors are not compensated by performing WBC along the array dimension (also primarily slow dimension). A diode bar array may have a range of emitters typically from 19 to 49 or more. As noted, diode bar arrays are typically formed such that the array dimension is where each emitter's slow dimension is aligned side by side with the other emitters. As a result, when using WBC along the array dimension, whether a diode bar array has 19 or 49 emitters (or any other number of emitters), the result is that of a single emitter. By contrast, when performing WBC along the orthogonal or fast dimension of the same single diode bar array, the result is each emitted beam increases in spectral brightness, or narrowed spectral bandwidth, but there is not a reduction in the number of beams (equivalently, there is not an increase in spatial brightness).

This point is illustrated in FIG. 8. On the left of FIG. 8 is shown a front view of an array of emitters 1 and 2 where WBC along the slow dimension is being performed. Along the right side using the same arrays 1 and 2, WBC along the fast dimension is being performed. When comparing array 1, WBC along the slow dimension reduces the output profile to that of a single beam, while WBC along the fast dimension narrows the spectral bandwidth, as shown along the right side array 1, but does not reduce the output profile size to that of a single beam.

Using COTS diode bars and stacks the output beam from beam combining along the stack dimension is usually highly asymmetric. Symmetrization, or reducing the beam profile ratio closer to equaling one, of the beam profile is important when trying to couple the resultant output beam profile into an optical fiber. Many of the applications of combining a plurality of laser emitters require fiber coupling at some point in an expanded system. Thus, having greater control over the output profile is another advantage of the application.

Further analyzing array 2 in FIG. 8 shows the limitation of the number of emitters per laser diode array that is practical for performing WBC along the fast dimension if very high brightness symmetrization of the output profile is desired. As discussed above, typically the emitters in a laser diode bar are aligned side by side along their slow dimension. Each additional laser element in a diode bar is going to increase the asymmetry in the output beam profile. When performing WBC along the fast dimension, even if a number of laser diode bars are stacked on each other, the resultant output profile will still be that of a single laser diode bar. For example if one uses a COTS 19-emitter diode laser bar, the best that one can expect is to couple the output into a 100 μm/0.22 NA fiber. Thus, to couple into a smaller core fiber, a lower number of emitters per bar is required. One could simply fix the number of emitters in the laser diode array to 5 emitters in order to help with the symmetrization ratio; however, fewer emitters per laser diode bar array generally results in an increase of cost per bar or cost per Watt of output power. For instance, the cost of a diode bar having 5 emitters may be roughly the same as that of a diode bar having 49 emitters. However, the 49 emitter bar may have a total power output of up to an order-of-magnitude greater than that of the 5 emitter bar. Thus, it would be advantageous for a WBC system to be able to achieve very high brightness output beams using COTS diode bars and stacks with larger number of emitters. An additional advantage of bars with larger number of emitters is the ability to de-rate the power per emitter to achieve a certain power level per bar for a given fiber-coupled power level, thereby increasing the diode laser bar lifetime or bar reliability.

One embodiment that addresses this issue is illustrated in FIG. 3A, which shows a schematic of WBC system 300 a with an optical rotator 305 placed after collimation lenses 306 and before the transform optic 308. It should be noted the transform optic 308 may include or consist essentially of a number of lenses or mirrors or other optical components. The optical rotator 305 individually rotates the fast and slow dimension of each emitted beam shown in the input front view 312 to produce the re-oriented front view 307. It should be noted that the optical rotators can selectively rotate each beam individually irrespective of the other beams or can rotate all the beams through the same angle simultaneously. It should also be noted that a cluster of two or more beams can be rotated simultaneously. The resulting output after WBC is performed along the array dimension is shown in output front view 318 as a single emitter. Dispersive element 314 is shown as a reflection diffraction grating, but may also be a dispersive prism, a grism (prism+grating), transmission grating, and Echelle grating. This particular embodiment illustrated shows only four laser emitters; however, as discussed above this system could take advantage of a laser diode array that included many more elements, e.g., 49. This particular embodiment illustrated shows a single bar at a particular wavelength band (example at 976 nm) but in actual practice it may be composed of multiple bars, all at the same particular wavelength band, arranged side-by-side. Furthermore, multiple wavelength bands (example 976 nm, 915 nm, and 808 nm), with each band composed of multiple bars, may be combined in a single cavity. Because WBC was performed across the fast dimension of each beam it was easier to design a system with a higher brightness (higher efficiency due to insensitivity due to bar imperfections); additionally, narrower bandwidth and higher power output are all achieved. As previously discussed it should be noted that in some embodiments WBC system 300 a may not include output coupler 316 and/or collimation lens(es) 306. Furthermore, pointing errors and smile errors are compensated for by combining along the stack dimension (in this embodiment this is also the fast dimension). FIG. 3B, shows an implementation similar to 3A except that a stack 350 of laser arrays 302 forms a 2-D input profile 312. Cavity 300 b similarly consists of collimation lens(es) 306, optical rotator 305, transform optic 308, dispersive element 314 (here a diffraction grating), and an output coupler 316 with a partially reflecting surface. Each of the beams is individually rotated by optical rotator 305 to form an after rotator profile 307. The WBC dimension is along the array dimension, but with the rotation each of the beams will be combined across their fast axis. Fast axis WBC produces outputs with very narrow line widths and high spectral brightness. These are usually ideal for industrial applications such as welding. After transform optic 308 overlaps the rotated beams onto dispersive element 314 a single output profile is produced and partially reflected back through the cavity into the laser elements. The output profile 318 is now comprised of a line of three (3) beams that is quite asymmetric.

FIG. 3C shows the same implementation when applied to 2-D laser elements. The system consists of 2-D laser elements 302, optical rotator 305, transform optical system (308 and 309 a-b) a dispersive element 314, and a partially reflecting mirror 316. FIG. 3C illustrates a stack 350 of laser diode bars 302 with each bar having an optical rotator 305. Each of the diode bars 302 (three total) as shown in external cavity 300 c includes four emitters. After input front view 312 is reoriented by optical rotator 305, reoriented front view 307 shows the slow dimension of each beam aligned along the stack dimension. WBC is performed along the dimension, which is now the slow axis of each beam and the output front view 318 now comprises a single column of beams with each beam's slow dimension oriented along the stack dimension. Optic 309 a and 309 b provide a cylindrical telescope to image along the array dimension. The function of the three cylindrical lenses is two-fold. The middle cylindrical lens is the transform lens and its main function is to overlap all the beams onto the dispersive element. The two other cylindrical lenses 309 a and 309 b form an a focal cylindrical telescope along the non-beam combining dimension. Its main function is to make sure all laser elements along the non-beam combining dimension are propagating normal to the partially reflecting mirror. As such the implementation as shown in FIG. 3C has the same advantages as the one shown in FIG. 1C. However, unlike the implementation as shown in FIG. 1C the output beam is not the same as the input beam. The number of emitters in the output beam 318 in FIG. 3C is the same as the number of bars in the stack. For example, if the 2-D laser source consists of a three-bar stack with each bar composed of 49 emitters, then the output beam in FIG. 1C is a single bar with 49 emitters. However, in FIG. 3C the output beam is a single bar with only three emitters. Thus, the output beam quality or brightness is more than one order of magnitude higher. This brightness improvement is very significant for fiber-coupling. For higher power and brightness scaling multiple stacks can be arranged side-by-side.

To illustrate this configuration further, for example, assume WBC is to be performed of a three-bar stack, with each bar comprising of 19 emitters. So far, there are three options. First, wavelength beam combining can be performed along the array dimension to generate three beams as shown in FIG. 1B. Second, wavelength beam combining can be performed along the stack dimension to generate 19 beams a shown FIG. 1C. Third, wavelength beam combining can be performed along the array dimension using beam rotator to generate 19 beams as shown FIG. 3C. There are various trade-offs for all three configuration. The first case gives the highest spatial brightness but the lowest spectral brightness. The second case gives the lowest spatial brightness with moderate spectral brightness and beam symmetrization is not required to couple into a fiber. The third case gives the lowest spatial brightness but the highest spectral brightness and beam symmetrization is required to couple into an optical fiber. In some applications this more desirable.

To illustrate the reduction in asymmetry FIG. 3D has been drawn showing the final output profile 319 a where the system of 300 b did not have an optical rotator and output profile 319 b where the system includes an optical rotator. Though these figures are not drawn to scale, they illustrate an advantage achieved by utilizing an optical rotator, in a system with this configuration where WBC is performed across the slow dimension of each beam. The shorter and wider 319 b is more suitable for fiber coupling than the taller and slimmer 319 a.

Examples of various optical rotators are shown in FIG. 4A-4C. FIG. 4A illustrates an array of cylindrical lenses (419 a and 419 b) that cause input beam 411 a to be rotated to a new orientation at 411 b. FIG. 4B similarly shows input 411 a coming into the prism at an angle, which results in a new orientation or rotation beam 411 b. FIG. 4C illustrates an embodiment using a set of step mirrors 417 to cause input 411 a to rotate at an 80-90 degree angle with the other input beams resulting in a new alignment of the beams 411 b where they are side by side along their respective fast axis. These devices and others may cause rotation through both non-polarization sensitive as well as polarization sensitive means. Many of these devices become more effective if the incoming beams are collimated in at least the fast dimension. It is also understood that the optical rotators can selectively rotate the beams by various amounts, including less than 90 degrees, 90 degrees, and greater than 90 degrees.

The optical rotators in the previous embodiments may selectively rotate individual, rows or columns, and groups of beams. In some embodiments a set angle of rotation, such as a range of 80-90 degrees is applied to the entire profile or subset of the profile. In other instances, varying angles of rotation are applied uniquely to each beam, row, column or subset of the profile (see FIGS. 9A-B). For instance, one beam may be rotated by 45 degrees in a clockwise direction while an adjacent beam is rotated 45 degrees in a counterclockwise direction. It is also contemplated one beam is rotated 10 degrees and another is rotated 70 degrees. The flexibility the system provides may be applied to a variety of input profiles, which in turn helps determine how the output profile is to be formed.

Performing WBC along an intermediate angle between the slow and fast dimension of the emitted beams is also well within the scope of the invention (See for example 6 on FIG. 9B). Some laser elements as described herein, produce electromagnetic radiation and include an optical gain medium. When the radiation or beams exit the optical gain portion they generally are collimated along the slow and/or fast dimension through a series of micro lenses. From this point, the embodiments already described in this section included an optical rotator that selectively rotated each beam prior to the beams being overlapped by a transform lens along either the slow or the fast dimension of each beam onto a dispersive element. The output coupler may or may not be coated to partially reflect the beams back into the system to the laser element where the returned beams assist in generating more external cavity feedback in the optical gain element portion until they are reflected off a fully reflective mirror in the back portion of the laser element. The location of the optical elements listed above and others not listed with respect to the second partially reflective surface helps determine whether the optical elements are within an external cavity system or outside of the lasing cavity. In some embodiments, not shown, the second partially reflective mirror resides at the end of the optical gain elements and prior to the collimating or rotating optics.

Another method for manipulating beams and configurations to take advantage of the various WBC methods includes using a spatial repositioning element. This spatial repositioning element may be placed in an external cavity at a similar location as that of an optical rotator. For example, FIG. 6 shows a spatial repositioning element 603 placed in the external cavity WBC system 600 after the collimating lenses 606 and before the transform optic(s) 608. The purpose of a spatial repositioning element is to reconfigure an array of elements into a new configuration. FIG. 6 shows a three-bar stack with N elements reconfigured to a six-bar stack with N/2 elements. Spatial repositioning is particularly useful in embodiments such as 600, where stack 650 is a mechanical stack or one where diode bar arrays 602 and their output beams were placed on top of each other either mechanically or optically. With this kind of configuration the laser elements have a fixed-position to one another. Using a spatial repositioning element can form a new configuration that is more ideal for WBC along the fast dimension. The new configuration makes the output profile more suitable for fiber coupling.

For example, FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment wherein a two-dimensional array of emitters 712 is reconfigured during a spatial repositioning step 703 by a spatial repositioning optical element such as an array of periscope mirrors. The reconfigured array shown by reconfigured front view 707 is now ready for a WBC step 710 to be performed across the WBC dimension, which here is the fast dimension of each element. The original two-dimensional profile in this example embodiment is an array of 12 emitters tall and 5 emitters wide. After the array is transmitted or reflected by the spatial repositioning element a new array of 4 elements tall and 15 elements wide is produced. In both arrays the emitters are arranged such that the slow dimension of each is vertical while the fast dimension is horizontal. WBC is performed along the fast dimension which collapses the 15 columns of emitters in the second array into 1 column that is 4 emitters tall. This output is already more symmetrical than if WBC had been performed on the original array, which would have resulted in a single column 15 emitters tall. As shown, this new output may be further symmetrized by an individually rotating step 705 rotating each emitter by 90 degrees. In turn, a post-WBC front view 721 is produced being the width of a single beam along the slow dimension and stacked 4 elements high, which is more suitable for coupling into a fiber.

One way of reconfiguring the elements in a one-dimensional or two-dimensional profile is to make ‘cuts’ or break the profile into sections and realign each section accordingly. For example, in FIG. 7 two cuts 715 were made in 713. Each section was placed side by side to form 707. These optical cuts can be appreciated if we note the elements of 713 had a pre-arranged or fixed-position relationship. It is also well within the scope to imagine any number of cuts being made to reposition the initial input beam profile. Each of these sections may in addition to being placed side by side, be on top and even randomized if so desired.

Spatial repositioning elements may be comprised of a variety of optical elements including periscope optics that are both polarized and non-polarized as well as other repositioning optics. Step mirrors as shown in FIG. 4a may also be reconfigured to become a spatial repositioning element.

Additional embodiments of the invention are illustrated in FIGS. 9A-9B. The system shown in 1 of FIG. 9A shows a single array of four beams aligned side to side along the slow dimension. An optical rotator individually rotates each beam. The beams are then combined along the fast dimension and are reduced to a single beam by WBC. In this arrangement it is important to note that the 4 beams could easily be 49 or more beams. It may also be noted that if some of the emitters are physically detached from the other emitters, the individual emitter may be mechanically rotated to be configured in an ideal profile. A mechanical rotator may be comprised of a variety of elements including friction sliders, locking bearings, tubes, and other mechanisms configured to rotate the laser element. Once a desired position is achieved the laser elements may then be fixed into place. It is also conceived that an automated rotating system that can adjust the beam profile depending on the desired profile may be implemented. This automated system may either mechanically reposition a laser or optical element or a new optical element may be inserted in and out of the system to change the output profile as desired.

System 2 shown in FIG. 9A, shows a two-dimensional array having three stacked arrays with four beams each aligned along the slow dimension. (Similar to FIG. 3C) As this stacked array passes through an optical rotator and WBC along the fast dimension a single column of three beams tall aligned top to bottom along the slow dimension is created. Again it is appreciated that if the three stacked arrays shown in this system had 50 elements, the same output profile would be created, albeit one that is brighter and has a higher output power.

System 3 in FIG. 9B, shows a diamond pattern of four beams wherein the beams are all substantially parallel to one another. This pattern may also be indicative of a random pattern. The beams are rotated and combined along the fast dimension, which results in a column of three beams aligned along the slow dimension from top to bottom.

Missing elements of diode laser bars and stacks due to emitter failure or other reasons is an example of System 3. System 4 illustrates a system where the beams are not aligned, but that one beam is rotated to be aligned with a second beam such that both beams are combined along the fast dimension forming a single beam. System 4 demonstrates a number of possibilities that expands WBC methods beyond using laser diode arrays. For instance, the input beams in System 4 may be from carbon dioxide (CO₂) lasers, semiconductor or diode lasers, diode pumped fiber lasers, lamp-pumped or diode-pumped Nd:YAG lasers, Disk Lasers, and so forth. The ability to mix and match the type of lasers and wavelengths of lasers to be combined is another advantage of embodiments of the present invention.

System 5 illustrates a system where the beams are not rotated to be fully aligned with WBC dimension. The result is a hybrid output that maintains many of the advantages of WBC along the fast dimension. In several embodiments the beams are rotated a full 90 degrees to become aligned with WBC dimension, which has often been the same direction or dimension as the fast dimension. However, System 5 and again System 6 show that optical rotation of the beams as a whole (System 6) or individually (System 5) may be such that the fast dimension of one or more beams is at an angle theta or offset by a number of degrees with respect to the WBC dimension. A full 90 degree offset would align the WBC dimension with the slow dimension while a 45 degree offset would orient the WBC dimension at an angle halfway between the slow and fast dimension of a beam as these dimension are orthogonal to each other. In one embodiment, the WBC dimension has an angle theta at approximately 3 degrees off the fast dimension of a beam.

As detailed herein, many conventional WBC laser systems utilize diffraction gratings as dispersive elements (i.e., as wavelength combiners) and output couplers or Bragg gratings for wavelength stabilization. Embodiments of the present invention utilize etalons for one or both of these purposes. As utilized herein, the term “etalon” refers to an optical element featuring opposing at least partially reflective surfaces separated by a gap therebetween. At least one of the reflective surfaces may be less than approximately 100% reflective. The reflective surfaces may be parallel; in such cases the etalon has the form of a plate. In other embodiments, at least one of the reflective surfaces may be curved (e.g., convexly or concavely). The etalon may operate as an optical resonator, and the resonance frequencies may be a function of the tilt angle of the etalon.

FIG. 11 depicts a WBC laser system 1100 in which a planar etalon 1110 is utilized to combine input beams emitted by a one-dimensional or two-dimensional array of beam emitters 102, thereby replacing the diffraction grating utilized in various embodiments detailed above. Transform optics (or “focusing optics”) 108 focus the beams from the beam emitters 102 onto the etalon 1110; for example, the transform optics 108 may focus the beams such that the waist of each beam is located on etalon 1110. The optics 108 may be located at, e.g., approximately a focal length away from the beam emitters 102. The etalon 1110, or at least a portion thereof, may also be located a distance away from optics 108 that is approximately equal to the focal length of optics 108. As shown in FIG. 11, the laser system 1100 may also include one or more collimation optics 106 proximate the emission surface of beam emitters 102. Optics 106 collimate, rotate, and/or otherwise manipulate the beams emitted by beam emitters 102, and optics 106 may include or consist essentially of, for example, an optical rotator (as detailed above and/or as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/734,480, filed Jun. 9, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein) or a micro-optics arrangement (e.g., a slow-axis collimation lens, an optical twister, and/or a fast-axis collimation lens, as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/667,094, filed Mar. 24, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein).

The interior volume of etalon 1110 may include, consist essentially of, or consist of, for example, glass or another medium substantially transparent to the beams. In various embodiments of the invention, the etalon 1110 includes or consists essentially of a plate having a first (or “front”) surface 1120 and a second (or “back”) surface 1130 spaced apart therefrom. Front surface 1120 is less than 100% reflective to the wavelengths of the beams, enabling at least a portion of each beam to enter the interior volume of etalon 1110. In various embodiments, the surface 1120 is still fairly highly reflective, for example, greater than 75% reflective, greater than 85% reflective, greater than 90% reflective, or even greater than 95% reflective. A substantial portion of back surface 1130 is approximately 100% reflective; thus, light entering the etalon 1110 through surface 1120 and encountering back surface 1130 is typically reflected one or more times. As shown in FIG. 11, back surface 1130 also includes an exit portion 1140 that exhibits little if any reflectivity to the light from the emitters 102. For example, exit portion 1140 may have an anti-reflection coating thereon, and the reflectivity of exit portion 1140 may be less than 10%, less than 5%, less than 2%, or even less than 1%.

As shown in FIG. 11, the front and back surfaces 1120, 1130 of etalon 1110 may establish a resonance cavity in which the beams from emitters 102 are reflected within etalon 1110 until combining into a single output beam 1150. (FIG. 11 also depicts a series of virtual images 1160 of the beams from emitters 102 for reference.) As shown, the beam from one of the beam emitters 102 may be at least partially transmitted by front surface 1120 and be combined with the other beams within output beam 1150 (i.e., be emitted from exit portion 1140) without reflection from back surface 1130. The etalon 1110 is disposed such that its optical axis (i.e., the axis normal to the front and back surfaces 1120, 1130) is tilted at a non-zero angle with respect to the beams. For example, the etalon 1110 may be tilted at an angle between approximately 2° and approximately 25°,or between approximately 3° and approximately 20°. The output beam 1150 may be collimated by collimation optics 1170 (e.g., one or more curved mirrors or lenses) before propagating to a partially reflective output coupler 116 (e.g., a bulk mirror, a volume Bragg grating, a portion of or an interface to or within an optical fiber, or a fiber Bragg grating, as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/854,494, filed on Sep. 15, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein). The unique wavelength emitted by each beam emitter is locked in by resonance between the output coupler 116 and the beam emitters 102 (e.g., the back facets of individual diode emitters). The remaining portion of output beam 1150 is transmitted by the output coupler.

In various embodiments of the present invention, an etalon may be utilized to stabilize the beams of individual beam emitters. For example, FIG. 12 depicts a WBC laser system 1200 that includes or consists essentially of a wavelength stabilizer 1205 and a wavelength combiner 1210. As shown, beams are emitted by a one-dimensional or two-dimensional array of beam emitters 102. The beams may be manipulated by one or more (e.g., one for each beam, or one shared by all beams) optics 106. Optics 106 collimate, rotate, and/or otherwise manipulate the beams emitted by beam emitters 102, and optics 106 may include or consist essentially of, for example, an optical rotator (as detailed above and/or as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/734,480, filed Jun. 9, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein) or a micro-optics arrangement (e.g., a slow-axis collimation lens, an optical twister, and/or a fast-axis collimation lens, as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/667,094, filed Mar. 24, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein). The beams are then typically focused by focusing optics 108 onto a plano-convex etalon 1215. As shown, the etalon 1215 has a planar first (or “front”) surface 1220 and a convex second (or “back”) surface 1225; thus, the etalon 1215 supports multi-spatial modes utilized for feedback. The etalon 1215 has an optical axis 1230 that is tilted at a non-zero angle with respect to the initial beam propagation direction. For example, the etalon 1215 may be tilted at an angle between approximately 2° and approximately 25°, or between approximately 3° and approximately 20°. Thus, the unique angle of incidence on the etalon 1215 of each beam stabilizes each beam at a unique wavelength via optical feedback 1235. The tilt angle also substantially minimizes or prevents specular reflection feedback from surfaces 1220, 1225, which may have a high reflectivity at the desired wavelength band (e.g., the wavelengths of the beams emitted by emitters 102). For example, one or both surfaces 1220, 1225 may be greater than 75% reflective, greater than 85% reflective, greater than 90% reflective, or even greater than 95% reflective. The interior volume of etalon 1215 may include, consist essentially of, or consist of, for example, glass or another medium substantially transparent to the beams.

After stabilization by the etalon 1215, the beams may be combined into a multi-wavelength output beam in the wavelength combiner 1210. As shown in FIG. 12, within the wavelength combiner 1210, the beams may be collimated via collimation optics 1240 and focused by focusing optics 1245 (e.g., one or more cylindrical lenses and/or mirrors, and/or one or more spherical lenses and/or mirrors) that combine the beams to form a combined beam that propagates toward a dispersive element 114. The dispersive element 114 (e.g., a diffraction grating, a dispersive prism, a grism (prism/grating), a transmission grating, or an Echelle grating) may be disposed approximately at the focal length of the focusing optics 1245. As described herein, the dispersive element 114 receives the combined beam and transmits the beam as a multi-wavelength beam 1250 having a high brightness. The output beam 1250 may subsequently be coupled into an optical fiber and/or delivered to a workpiece for applications such as cutting, welding, etc.

The terms and expressions employed herein are used as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding any equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, but it is recognized that various modifications are possible within the scope of the invention claimed. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A laser system comprising: an array of beam emitters each emitting a beam, the beams being emitted substantially parallel to each other in a propagation direction; an etalon for receiving the beams and combining the beams into a multi-wavelength beam, the etalon having an optical axis, a front surface, and a back surface optically downstream of the front surface; disposed optically downstream of the beam emitters and optically upstream of the etalon, focusing optics for focusing the beams toward the etalon; and a partially reflective output coupler for receiving the multi-wavelength beam, reflecting a first portion thereof back through the etalon to the beam emitters, thereby stabilizing each beam to a different wavelength, and transmitting a second portion thereof as an output beam composed of multiple wavelengths.
 2. The laser system of claim 1, further comprising collimation optics disposed optically downstream of the etalon and optically upstream of the partially reflective output coupler.
 3. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the front surface of the etalon is substantially parallel to the back surface of the etalon.
 4. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the etalon comprises at least one of glass, sapphire, or fused silica.
 5. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the output coupler comprises at least one of a mirror, a volume Bragg grating, or a fiber Bragg grating.
 6. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the optical axis of the etalon is tilted at a non-zero angle with respect to the propagation direction.
 7. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the front surface of the etalon is partially reflective to the beams.
 8. The laser system of claim 7, wherein a reflectivity of the front surface of the etalon to the beams is greater than approximately 75% but less than 100%.
 9. The laser system of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of the back surface of the etalon is at least partially reflective to the beams.
 10. The laser system of claim 9, wherein the at least a portion of the back surface of the etalon has a reflectivity to the beams of approximately 100%.
 11. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the back surface of the etalon has (i) a reflective portion for reflecting the beams back toward the front surface, and (ii) an exit portion from which the multi-wavelength beam exits the etalon.
 12. The laser system of claim 11, wherein one or more of the beams is reflected by both the front surface and the reflective portion of the back surface prior to combination into the multi-wavelength beam.
 13. The laser system of claim 11, wherein the exit portion of the back surface of the etalon comprises an anti-reflective coating thereon.
 14. The laser system of claim 11, wherein the etalon is positioned to receive the beam from one of the beam emitters and propagate at least a portion thereof directly through the exit portion of the back surface without reflection from the reflective portion.
 15. A laser system comprising: an array of beam emitters each emitting a beam, the beams being emitted substantially parallel to each other in a propagation direction; an etalon for (i) receiving the beams, (ii) reflecting a first portion of each beam from a surface of the etalon back to the array of beam emitters, thereby stabilizing each beam at a unique wavelength, and (iii) transmitting a second portion of each beam such that the second portions of the beams are transmitted through the etalon only once without reflection back to the etalon, the etalon having an optical axis, a front surface, and a back surface optically downstream of the front surface; disposed optically downstream of the beam emitters and optically upstream of the etalon, focusing optics for focusing the beams toward the etalon; and disposed optically downstream of the etalon, a dispersive element for receiving and dispersing the beams, thereby forming a multi-wavelength output beam.
 16. The laser system of claim 15, further comprising collimation optics disposed optically downstream of the etalon and optically upstream of the dispersive element.
 17. The laser system of claim 15, wherein the dispersive element comprises a diffraction grating.
 18. The laser system of claim 15, wherein the etalon comprises at least one of glass, sapphire, or fused silica.
 19. The laser system of claim 15, further comprising, disposed optically downstream of the etalon and optically upstream of the dispersive element, second focusing optics for focusing the beams onto the dispersive element.
 20. The laser system of claim 15, wherein the optical axis of the etalon is tilted at a non-zero angle with respect to the propagation direction.
 21. The laser system of claim 15, wherein the front surface of the etalon is substantially planar.
 22. The laser system of claim 21, wherein the back surface of the etalon is convexly curved.
 23. The laser system of claim 15, wherein the back surface of the etalon is convexly curved.
 24. The laser system of claim 1, wherein no dispersive element or diffraction grating is disposed optically between the array of beam emitters and the output beam transmitted by the partially reflective output coupler.
 25. The laser system of claim 1, wherein no dispersive element or diffraction grating is disposed optically between the etalon and the output beam transmitted by the partially reflective output coupler.
 26. The laser system of claim 1, wherein the etalon is positioned to receive each of the beams at a different point on the front surface of the etalon.
 27. The laser system of claim 15, wherein the etalon is configured to support multi-spatial modes. 